The Girl from Cotton Lane: A gripping 1920s saga of life in the East End (Tanner Trilogy Book 2)
By (Author) Harry Bowling
Headline Publishing Group
Headline Book Publishing
1st June 2009
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.914
Paperback
576
Width 130mm, Height 198mm, Spine 40mm
465g
Cotton Lane in dockland Bermondsey is one of the many small cobbled streets which serve the wharves. On the corner is Bradley s Dining Rooms, the favourite eating place of the rivermen, trade union officials and horse and motor drivers. Since her marriage to Fred Bradley, Carrie has been running the dining rooms, and trade has picked up since the end of the Great War. But all is not well between Carrie and Fred. For although they have a little daughter they adore, neither of them is truly content. Will they ever know true happiness
"Poignant, nostalgic but not romanticized stories of good-hearted ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances." "Independent""
"Poignant, nostalgic--but not romanticized--stories of good-hearted ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances." --"Independent"
Harry was born in 1931 in a back street off the Tower Bridge Road. He left school at the age of 14. Only when his own children began to ask questions about the war, did Harry realise how many stories he had to tell. In his fifties, he was given early retirement from his job as a brewery driver-drayman, and was at last able to devote his time to writing. He became known as 'the King of Cockney sagas', who wrote eighteen bestselling novels of London life. Sadly Harry died in 1999 and the Harry Bowling Prize was set up in 2000 in his memory.